Phased array antenna for radio frequency identification

A multi-element, H plane, phased, dipole array antenna has a high gain over a wide angle in azimuth and over a controlled sector in elevation. Two printed wiring boards feed and physically support the dipole antenna elements. The phase and spacing of the dipole elements establish the radiation elevation angle, and a planar metallic reflector, spaced on the order of a half wavelength of the RF signal from the dipole array, interacts with the dipole-element pattern, to provide the wide angle azimuth gain.

Skip to: Description  ·  Claims  ·  References Cited  · Patent History  ·  Patent History
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

This invention relates to compact, phase array antennas and, more particularly, to a phase array antenna for use in a vehicular radio frequency identification system.

2. Background of the Invention

As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, railroads are beginning to use a radio frequency identification (RFID) systems to keep track of their rolling equipment. As illustrated in FIG. 1, in such RFID systems, a tag 10 attached to the side of a moving railroad car responds to interrogation signals from a trackside antenna 12. Coded information about the passing railroad car is received by the trackside RFID equipment. Reliable operation depends on a sustained RF link between the fixed trackside antenna 12 and the moving tag antenna 10 so that multiple cycles of sequentially-coded data are transmitted and received.

Where there are adjacent parallel tracks, the tags on the inside car surfaces (i.e. the car surface between the two tracks) must be read by a low-profile trackside antenna. The top surface of a trackside antenna for such an interior antenna must be close to the ground (i.e. not extend above the rail), both by regulation, and by the nature of its environment. Also, because of the limited space between tracks, the trackside antenna is necessarily close to the passing RFID tags. These geometric factors create a very unfavorable situation for the antenna-to-antenna link: the effective gain of the railroad tag antenna in the direction of the trackside antenna is suppressed, and the overlap of the two antenna patterns tends to be brief because of the rapidly-changing angular geometry and the directive nature of the patterns. The relatively weak link, which exists for only a short duration using prior art trackside antennas, produces unreliable tag reads.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

An object of this invention is the provision of a fixed, restricted-height antenna, which provides enhanced tag illumination in a radio frequency identification system.

Another object of this invention is the provision of a mechanically simple, printed circuit antenna array with a printed circuit unbalanced to balanced feed, so that critical parts of the assembly can be readily manufactured using printed wiring technology.

Briefly, this invention contemplates the provision of a multi-element, H plane, phased, dipole array antenna with a useful gain over a wide angle in azimuth and over a controlled sector in elevation. Two printed wiring boards feed and can support the dipole antenna elements. The phase and spacing of the dipole elements establish the radiation elevation angle, and a planar metallic reflector, spaced on the order of a half wavelength of the RF signal from the dipole array, interacts with the dipole-element pattern, to provide the wide angle azimuth gain.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The foregoing and other objects, aspects and advantages will be better understood from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention with reference to the drawings, in which:

FIG. 1 is a pictorial diagram illustrating the limitations of the track-based antennas used in prior art railroad, radio-frequency identification systems.

FIG. 2 is a schematic, isometric drawing of one embodiment of an antenna in accordance with the teachings of this invention.

FIG. 2A is a plan drawing of a bent dipole for use in the antenna of FIG. 2.

FIG. 3 is a pictorial diagram of a railroad, radio-frequency identification system with an antenna installation in accordance with the teachings of this invention.

FIG. 4A is a polar plot of an example of a radiation pattern, in elevation, of a phase array antenna in accordance with the teachings of this invention.

FIG. 4B is representation of a rectangular and spherical coordinate system showing the antenna of the present invention at the origin and defining the angles .THETA., and .phi. used in the polar plots of FIGS. 4A and 5, relative to the rectangular coordinate system.

FIG. 5 is a polar plot of an example of the radiation pattern, in azimuth, of the antenna, created by taking a .THETA.=45.degree. conical cut of the pattern shown in FIG. 4A. The conical cut creates a surface representation of the antenna gain.

FIG. 6 is block diagram of the antenna shown in FIG. 2, constructed in accordance with the teachings of this invention.

FIGS. 7A and 7B are plan views of a printed circuit board pair used to construct the antenna shown schematically in FIG. 6.

FIGS. 8A and 8B are plan views of the opposite sides of the printed circuit boards shown in FIGS. 7A and 7B.

FIG. 9 is a sectional view of the assembled printed circuit board pair taken at the balun location.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION

Referring now to FIG. 2, four dipole antenna elements 14, each comprised of a pair of radiation elements 15 and 16, are supported by and fed by a pair of printed circuit boards 18 and 20. The antenna elements are arranged in an H plane array; i.e. the E planes of all elements are parallel and the H planes of all elements are coplanar. The radiation elements 15 and 16 are shown here as simple metal rods, but other dipole geometries may be used, such as the bent dipole geometry shown in the inset to FIG. 2. A metallic reflector 22 is disposed approximately 0.5 RF wavelengths from the dipole array (with the best spacing a function of the overall geometry). As will be explained more completely in connection with FIGS. 6-9, there is a space 24 between the boards 18 and 20, and traces on the boards form broadside coupled stripline transmission paths to feed the elements 15 and 16 in a desired phase relationship. The space 24 may be essentially void or may be filled with dielectric material appropriate to the electrical and mechanical design. The stripline terminology refers to a symmetrical pair of flat conductors forming a balanced configuration rather than the commonly used triplate (unbalanced) stripline configuration. The array axis 26 is along the line which connects the centers of all the array elements.

FIG. 3 depicts the antenna shown in FIG. 2 installed between parallel sets of railroad tracks. The antenna includes a radome housing 27 for protection from weather and other things in the environment which would adversely effect the antenna operation. The radome cover can be fabricated of commonly available plastic, such as polycarbonate. The overall height of the antenna allows it to be placed on the ground below level of the top-of-rail. With the antenna in position to read tags, the array axis 26 is normal to the track path and the antenna beam is tilted, by phasing, toward the passing tags 10 as illustrated, with a beamwidth, in elevation, designed to illuminate as strongly as practical the range in elevation where the tag may be located (24" to 60" above rail). FIG. 4A shows an example of a desired pattern in elevation. In the installation of FIG. 3, the principal lobe axis 17 of beam pattern is angled upwardly at about a 45.degree. angle so the beam intersects the tag path. FIG. 4B shows that angle .THETA. is measured from the z axis to the beam. The angle .phi. is measured from the x axis to the projection of the beam in the x-y plane.

The azimuth pattern of the antenna (i.e. the pattern along the path of the passing railroad car tags) is shaped as shown in FIG. 5 to enhance the power transfer between the tags 10 and the trackside antenna 12 as they approach one another and depart from one another. The gain on either side of the principal lobe axis in azimuth 21 is relatively flat or is enhanced depending on zenith angle. The depressed gain near the central part of the pattern is a very productive tradeoff to achieve the wide-angle character; there is a substantial increase in off-axis gain with a very tolerable loss in the overall antenna-to-tag link gain near .phi.=0. The loss at .phi.=0 is tolerable since the distance between the two antennas is at a minimum and the tag antenna gain is at a maximum, more than compensating for the reduction in gain in antenna 26 at .phi.=0. The azimuth pattern characteristic is primarily a result of the shape of the dipole radiator elements 15 and 16 and the spacing of the dipole elements from the reflector 22. The polar plots of FIGS. 4A and 5 have concentric circles showing the absolute gain in decibels increasing in the radially outward direction.

The bent dipole depicted in the inset of FIG. 2A contributes additional radiation at wide angles compared to a straight dipole. Also, the reflection (or the image) of the dipole element spaced 0.48 wavelengths from the reflector surface produces a net pattern with the useful shape of FIG. 5. Since the reflector is a primary contributor to the wide-angle pattern, its dimension W parallel to rails is large compared to conventional reflector-backed antennas; the width W of the antenna shown in FIG. 2 has a 2.8 wavelength-wide reflector compared to a one-wavelength (or less) reflector width for a common antenna. However, those skilled in the art will recognize this as a non-critical dimension. Narrower reflectors could alternatively be used without substantial change in performance.

FIG. 6 is an electrical, block diagram of the antenna shown in FIG. 2. A balun 30, which is integrated onto the circuit boards 18 and 20, provides a conversion and impedance matching from an unbalanced coaxial input 32 to a stripline feed network comprised of a "tree" of balanced transmission lines of various characteristic impedances labeled ZoL, etc., and electrical lengths labeled dL, etc. The antenna element loads are shown as boxes with Z1, Z2, Z3 and Z4. The impedance Z and length d of each stripline branch of the tree is selected to excite the antenna elements with phase displaced currents I1, I2, I3 and I4 so that the array gives a desired pattern factor in elevation. The parameters Z and d, which determine the element-to-element phase shift, can be determined by transmission-line circuit analysis, with due treatment of the mutual coupling of antenna elements. For example, to achieve the elevation pattern of FIG. 4A, the distribution network parameters (Z, d) were adjusted to give a nominally uniform amplitude distribution with a progressive phase shift of 100 degrees per element in an array with an element-to-element spacing of 0.58 wavelengths. This simple design is not broadband, but has more than adequate bandwidth for many applications.

FIGS. 7A and 7B show respectively the surfaces of the boards 18 and 20 that face one another when the boards are assembled. FIG. 7B is up-side-down with respect to FIG. 7A. Each board has four antenna element terminals 40 to which the elements 15 and 16 are respectively electrically and mechanically coupled. For RF power distribution to the terminals 40, each board has a set of circuit traces 42 extending horizontally from a vertical circuit trace 44 that form components of the balun. It will be appreciated that when the boards 18 and 20 are assembled, the traces on their interior surfaces shown here match up with one another and form strip transmission lines for the RF power. The corresponding trace patterns while preferably on the interior surface of the boards, as shown, could alternatively be positioned on the exterior surfaces of the boards. Varying the width and board-to-board spacing of the circuit traces of the power distribution network varies the impedance of the resulting strip transmission lines from the balun to the dipole elements 15 and 16 and the combination of variations in impedance and length from one element to the next varies the relative phase of the excitation of the respective dipole elements.

As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, printed circuit baluns (i.e. unbalanced to balanced signal transformation devices) have been proposed to provide interface signal matching from a coaxial feed line to a printed circuit dipole antenna. The balun structure here, comprises, in addition to the vertical stripline transmission line formed by the traces 44 on each board, a shorting plate 46 on the interior surface of the board 18. Plate 46 shorts the vertical trace 44 on board 18 to a corresponding section of the vertical trace on board 20, so that the remaining (unshorted) parts of the vertical traces form a balanced quarter-wavelength stub in parallel with the balanced feed point near the feed hole.

As can be seen in FIGS. 8A and 8B and FIG. 9, a central conductor 48 of a coaxial feed is connected to a circuit trace 50 on the outer surface of printed circuit board 18, and forms a microstrip transmission line with the vertical trace 44 on the interior surface of the board 18. This trace 50, which is a component of the balun, extends to a hole 52, through which extends a bridge wire 54, connecting the trace 50 to a circuit trace 56 on the outer surface of board 18. The bridge wire is insulated from the interior traces 44 on each board allowing only the direct electrical connection between the traces on the exterior surfaces of the boards. This topology, using an insulated through hole permits proper excitation of the interior traces 40, 42, and 44 by means of electromagnetic coupling. Circuit trace 56, which forms a microstrip transmission line with the vertical trace 46 on the inner side of the board, serves as an impedance matching and compensation stub in the balun. As shown in FIG. 9, the outer conductor 58 of the coaxial feed is connected, via the reflector 22, to the shorting plate 42 and the circuit traces 50 on the outer surface of the printed circuit board 18.

While the invention has been described in terms of a single preferred embodiment, those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced with modification within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.

Claims

1. A radio-frequency interrogation system for reading a transponder tag on a moving vehicle as the transponder tag moves along a path adjacent a fixed position adjacent said path, said system comprising in combination:

a phased array antenna comprised of a plurality of radiating dipole elements disposed at said fixed position;
said phased array antenna including a pair of printed circuit boards disposed with their respective interior surfaces disposed so that they are spaced apart, facing one another;
said plurality of radiating elements attached to respective ones of a plurality of printed circuit terminals on the interior surfaces of said pair of printed circuit boards with one radiating element of each of said dipole elements extending outwardly from an exterior surface on one of said pair of printed circuit boards and the other radiating element of each of said dipole elements extending outwardly from an exterior surface of the other of said pair of printed circuit boards;
a plurality of matching traces on corresponding interior surfaces of each of said printed circuit boards forming broadside coupled transmission lines for coupling RF energy to said terminals; and
an RF reflector disposed in a plane perpendicular to the said pair of printed circuit boards and separated from said plurality of dipole elements at a distance approximately equal to one-half wavelength of said RF energy.

2. A radio frequency interrogation system as in claim 1 wherein said fixed position is adjacent said path, said moving vehicle is a railroad car moving on parallel tracks, and said dipole elements lie in a plane parallel to the plane of said tracks.

3. A radio frequency interrogation system as in claim 1 wherein the axis of said phased array antenna is perpendicular to said path.

4. A radio frequency interrogation system as in claim 3 wherein said fixed position is adjacent said path, said moving vehicle is a railroad car moving on parallel tracks, and said dipole elements lie in a plane parallel to the plane of said tracks.

5. A radio-frequency interrogation system as in claim 1 further including a balanced to unbalanced, and impedance matching transformer comprised of circuit traces on the exterior surfaces of said printed circuit boards coupled to certain of said interior traces.

6. A phased array antenna comprised of:

a plurality of radiating dipole elements;
a pair of printed circuit boards disposed with their respective interior surfaces disposed so that they are spaced apart, facing one another;
said plurality of radiating elements attached to respective ones of a plurality of printed circuit terminals on the interior surfaces of said pair of said printed circuit boards with one radiating element of each of said dipole elements extending outwardly from an exterior surface on one of said pair of printed circuit boards and the other radiating element of each of said dipole elements extending outwardly from an exterior surface of the other of said pair of printed circuit boards;
a plurality of matching traces on the interior surfaces of each of said printed circuit boards forming broadside coupled transmission lines for coupling RF energy to said terminals; and
an RF reflector disposed in a plane perpendicular to the said pair of printed circuit boards and separated from said plurality of dipole elements at a distance approximately equal to one-half wavelength of said RF energy.

7. A phased array antenna as in claim 6 further including a balanced to unbalanced, and impedance matching transformer comprised of circuit traces on the exterior surfaces of said printed circuit boards coupled to certain of said interior traces.

Referenced Cited
U.S. Patent Documents
3681769 August 1972 Perrotti et al.
3750185 July 1973 Evans
3845490 October 1974 Manwarren et al.
4075632 February 21, 1978 Baldwin et al.
4287518 September 1, 1981 Frosh et al.
4460877 July 17, 1984 Sterns
4495505 January 22, 1985 Shields
4739328 April 19, 1988 Koelle et al.
4800393 January 24, 1989 Edward et al.
4847626 July 11, 1989 Kahler et al.
5087922 February 11, 1992 Tang et al.
5258770 November 2, 1993 Jones et al.
5440318 August 8, 1995 Butland et al.
Foreign Patent Documents
58-62902 April 1983 JPX
Other references
  • IBM Technical Disclosure Bulletin, vol. 37, No. 06A, Jun. 1994, pp. 145-146 .
Patent History
Patent number: 5686928
Type: Grant
Filed: Oct 13, 1995
Date of Patent: Nov 11, 1997
Assignee: Lockheed Martin Corporation (Bethesda, MD)
Inventors: Don Michael Pritchett (Apalachin, NY), Matthew J. Milicic, Jr. (Newark Valley, NY), Edward E. Greene (Barton, NY)
Primary Examiner: Michael C. Wimer
Law Firm: Lane Aitken and McCann
Application Number: 8/542,755